The Oasis

Clayton sought to provide a ‘home from home’, where a man could sit quietly with his thoughts, maybe read, or write a letter home, have a quiet conversation over a cup of tea with a friend … or, if he wished, pray.

‘Tubby’ Clayton and his friend, the Rev. Neville Talbot, rented a house from hop merchant Maurice Coevoet and set up their ‘Every-Man’s Club’ where all soldiers, irrespective of rank were welcome.

They called it ‘Talbot House’ after Neville’s younger brother, Lt. Gilbert Talbot, killed at Hooge some months earlier. As soldiers will, they reduced the name to initials only, soon becoming, in the argot of Army signallers ‘Toc H’. ‘Nowadays’ said curator Jacques Ryckebosch ‘they’d probably call it ‘Tango Hotel’.

Toc H operated the ‘Robin Hood principle’. Officers’ Messes (the ‘rich!’) frequently ‘donated’ items of furniture, and other useful equipment for use in the club (by the ‘poor’) … often without their knowledge or permission! This was known as ‘scrounging’! It quickly became, in the words of one soldier ‘an oasis in a world gone crazy’. It offered a short respite, not only from the War but from the authority of the Army.

‘All Rank Abandon, Ye Who Enter Here’ says the sign on the door of Tubby Clayton’s room, paraphrasing the sign over the gates of Hell in Dante’s Inferno. That’s one example of the amusing signs around the place. There had to be rules, but Tubby saw no reason to get heavy about them.

A sign by the front door says ‘To Pessimists-Way Out’, with a pointing finger indicating the door.

‘The Boss Isn’t Always Right …but he is always THE BOSS!’ reads another.

A peculiarity of Toc H was that ‘the foundations are in the loft’. After much work, and not a little ‘scrounging’ by the Queen’s Westminster Rifles, who were billeted next door, the attic was converted into a chapel … usually simply referred to as the ‘Upper Room’. The altar was converted from a carpenter’s bench, which Tubby found in a garden shed. But, for hundreds of worshipping soldiers, it became ‘the shrine of the whole (Ypres) Salient’.

Food was always available … although you had to cook it yourself. Or, a cup of tea, a smoke or a companionable game of cards or billiards could be found. Sing-songs around the piano were popular. When Tubby put it about that a piano might be a welcome addition to the house’s inventory, resourceful soldiers ‘scrounged’ three!

Books could be borrowed from the library. But, all the notices in the world couldn’t prevent ‘scrounging’ so a system was devised whereby a soldier borrowing a book left his cap as deposit, without which he couldn’t leave the building.

An important feature was ‘Friendship’s Corner’. Here, on a bulletin board, soldiers could leave messages for, or make enquiries for their friends.

‘Come Into the Garden and Forget About the War’. Toc H was always proud of its restful ‘English Garden’, and still is to this day. ‘…. the largest room in the Old House’ wrote Clayton.

‘Men were everywhere, like lizards basking in the sun and half asleep’ he recorded. Another visitor said, in a letter home ‘The grass was almost unbelievably green; there were flowers and in a tree top, a bird was singing’.

Those were sights rarely seen in the Ypres salient at that time.

The garden was packed to capacity on 23rd July 1917, when Dr. Cosmo Lang, the Archbishop of York, preached a sermon on the eve of the Battle of Passchendaele.

The Toc H garden was only a short way in miles from the trenches … indeed, shortly after Clayton posted his ‘Come Into the Garden’ notice, a German shell landed nearby … causing one death, and damage for which Clayton subsequently received a bill from the house’s owner! But, in other respects, it was half a world away … and it still is.

Many people make pilgrimages to the Ypres Salient to visit the battlefields, museums, cemeteries and memorials. Some of them come to ‘Pops’ and Toc H, which has been preserved in almost exactly the state it was in the Great War, but still provides inexpensive hostel accommodation.

The garden is still there, kept just as ‘Tubby’ Clayton would have liked it, and it’s still available for visitors to go into, and, for a short while, ‘forget about the war’.

It wasn’t only soldiers who benefited from the facilities offered by Toc H. They frequently held parties and treats for the children of Poperinge.

‘They gave us cheese and toffees’ wrote Poperinge resident Jeanne Battheu ‘ …… we did not know what toffees were, but soon found out when we tasted them’

In 1917, when the activities seriously overcrowded the house, Tubby ‘seized’ the hop store next door, which became the ‘Concert Hall’. Several months afterwards, they say, he asked permission!

After the war, Toc H was handed back to its owner, but, ten years later, Major Paul Slessor, representing Lord Wakefield of Hythe negotiated the purchase of the house, and its presentation to the Talbot House Association. Major Slessor then sought to restore it to the way it was under Tubby’s benevolent rule, in which state it’s been ever since, except for during the Second World War, when the memorabilia were spirited away and hidden, to be returned after the war. 베트남 에코걸

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